Hardy Oil Company v. Burnham

124 S.W. 221, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 754
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 221 (Hardy Oil Company v. Burnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy Oil Company v. Burnham, 124 S.W. 221, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 754 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

— This is an appeal from an interlocutory order appointing a receiver, on petition of appellees, of certain land in Matagorda County embracing an oil field upon which appellants were operating. Appellees, sole heirs of Emily Louise Burnham, sued in trespass to try title and for partition, claiming to be owners of 21/96 of the Henry Parker league, and alleged that defendants, of whom there was a large number, many of them nonresident corporations, were ■ engaged in taking oil from the land and disposing of the same, and alleged certain facts which it was claimed *292 rendered an injunction and the appointment of a receiver necessary. The petition was presented to the judge of the 23d judicial district, who set the application down for hearing, and ordered that notice be given to the defendants, which was done. Afterwards the matter came up for hearing at a regular term of the District Court of Matagorda County, upon the petition, answers of defendants, and affidavits in support of each. The court appointed a receiver with certain powers, not necessary to be here specially set out further than to say that he was authorized to take charge of 21/96 of the output of the oil field, and to keep or dispose of the same, and to keep a strict account of oil produced. From this order the defendants appeal.

The facts established by the affidavits and record evidence with regard to the title of the respective parties are, briefly, as follows:

The Parker league was granted to Henry Parker, as his headright, by the government of Coahuila and Texas on February 5, 1833. Both in the grant and in the application therefor it is stated that Parker' was at the time a married man. His wife was Henrietta Parker, who died in 1835. There survived her, her said husband, Henry Parker, and four children, W. E., F. A., Emily Louise, ancestress of appellees, and an infant, never named, who survived the mother only about four or five weeks. F. A. died unmarried and without issue in 1867. Emily Louise married James G. Burnham and died in 1859 intestate, and appellees are her sole heirs. In 1866 Henry Parker, who died in 1869, conveyed to his son, W. E. Parker, the league of land in controversy. W. E. Parker sold and conveyed it to Vanham in 1899. From Vanham it has passed by various mesne conveyances to the appellants, who are in possession of same, some of them claiming title in fee, and some leasehold interests, most of them being engaged in producing oil, which was discovered on a part of the league in 1908. The suit was filed October 15, 1908, shortly after such discovery.

It will be seen that appellees’ claim rests upon the fact that the land was community property of Henry Parker and his wife, Henrietta; that upon the death of the said Henrietta her one-half passed to her children, and that the interest of Mrs. Burnham,. one of the children, was not affected by the subsequent -sale of the entire league by Henry Parker, but now belongs to appellees, her heirs. Appellants claim to be innocent purchasers without notice of the adverse title here asserted, and also set up title under the three, five and ten years statutes of limitation, and stale demand, supporting such claim by affidavits in opposition to the appointment of a receiver.

The court was in error in holding,, as was practically done in the powers given to the receiver, that appellees’ interest in the land was 21/96 thereof. This error was caused by not giving consideration to the fact that when the unnamed infant child of Henry Parker and wife died in 1835, under the law then in force, the share of such child in the mother’s estate passed wholly to the surviving father, and not, as under our statutes of descent and distribution, one-half to him and one-half to the surviving brothers and sisters. (Schmidt Civil Law of Mexico, arts. 1230-1235 et seq.; Hardy v. Hansom, 82 Texas, 102.) That this is the law is not denied by appellees, but *293 they seek to avoid the effect of it by the contention that the court was authorized by the evidence to find that upon the death of Mrs. Parker she only left three children, W. E., F. A. and Mrs. Burnham. In the face of the positive statement in the sworn petition, based, in so far as it related to the family history as stated in the affidavit, upon reliable information, and the affidavit of W. E. Parker, one of the children, introduced by appellees in support of their claim, in both of which it is positively stated that Mrs. Parker left four children, and particularly stated that one of them was an infant never named, who survived the mother only four or five weeks, the mother in fact dying in child-birth, a contrary conclusion, based only upon the statement of one of the plaintiffs, a grandson born ten years after the death of this child, that there were only three children, this contention can not be sustained. W. E. Parker, who was six or seven years old when this infant sister was born and died, could not be mistaken, while the grandson, all of whose knowledge of the family history was gained from others many years after these occurrences, might very well be. His informant may very well have forgotten the existence of this unnamed infant whose life was so brief. No other conclusion can be supported by the evidence of appellees than that there were four children as stated in the petition. Under this finding their interest, if any, would not be more than 5/32, and in no event should the power of the receiver have been extended further than necessary to protect this interest instead of 21/96 claimed by appellees. The first assignment of error presenting this objection to the decree must be sustained, but of itself would not require more than a modification of the order, and the taxation of the costs of the appeal against appellees.

Under the assignments of error from two to eight inclusive and propositions thereunder, objection is made to the order appointing the receiver, that plaintiffs had failed to show probable title to any interest in the land, upon several grounds separately set out. As we have concluded that the judgment appealed from should be reversed upon the ground set out in the ninth assignment, a full discussion of these assignments from two to eight will be pretermitted. We are constrained to follow the doctrine, which we understand to have been laid down by the Supreme Court in Hill v. Moore (85 Texas, 339), and to hold that the statements and recitations in the grant to Henry Parker were notice to all purchasers from or under him that the land was community property of himself and a then living wife, and this was sufficient to put such purchasers upon inquiry as to the death of the wife and the existence and rights of her heirs and affect them with notice of the true facts with regard to such matters, which could only be rebutted by showing that such inquiry was prosecuted with reasonable diligence and failed to disclose these facts. There was no evidence of such inquiry by any of the subsequent purchasers. None of them could rely upon the presumption that his predecessors in the title' had made such inquiry as was required to rebut the presumption of notice.

The existence of the outstanding title in Mrs. Parker’s heirs was a bar of any claim of appellants that they had title or color of title *294 to the interest claimed by appellees, under the three years statute of limitation. (Veramendi v. Hutchins, 48 Texas, 531; Cole v. Grigsby, 89 Texas, 229; Thompson v.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 221, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-oil-company-v-burnham-texapp-1909.